SNIFFING OUT CANCER WITH IMPROVED ELECTRONIC NOSE SENSORS
Scientists have been exploring new
ways to "smell" signs of cancer by analyzing what's in patients'
breath. In ACS' journal Nano
Letters, one team now
reports new progress toward this goal. The researchers have developed a small
array of flexible sensors, which accurately detect compounds in breath samples
that are specific to ovarian cancer.
Diagnosing cancer today usually
involves various imaging techniques, examining tissue samples under a
microscope, or testing cells for proteins or genetic material. In search of
safer and less invasive ways to tell if someone has cancer, scientists have
recently started analyzing breath and defining specific profiles of compounds
in breath samples. But translating these exhaled disease fingerprints into a
meaningful diagnosis has required a large number of sensors, which makes them
impractical for clinical use. Hossam Haick and colleagues sought to address
this problem.
The researchers developed a small, breath-diagnostic
array based on flexible gold-nanoparticle sensors for use in an
"electronic nose." The system -- tested on breath samples from 43 volunteers,
17 of whom had ovarian cancer -- showed an accuracy rate of 82 percent. The
researchers say developing this method further would require larger-scale
clinical testing. They add that the approach could also apply to diagnostics
for other diseases.
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